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Tuesday, 29 December 2009

Receiving Each Day as an Invitation

Each new day is a path of wonder, a different invitation. Days are where our lives gradually become visible.

Often it seems that we have to undertake the longest journey to arrive at what has been nearest all along. Mornings rarely find us so astounded at the new day that we are unable to decide between adventures. We take on days with the same conditioned reflex with which we wash and put on our clothes each day. If we could be mindful of how short our time is, we might learn how precious each day is. There are people who will never forget today. […]

The liturgy of dawn signals the wonder of the arriving day. Magic of darkness breaking through into color and light is such a promise of invitation and possibility. No wonder we always associate the hope and urgency of new beginning with the dawn. Each day is the field of brightness where the invitation of our life unfolds. A new day is an intricate and subtle matrix; written into its mystery are the happenings sent to awaken and challenge us.

No day is ever the same, and no day stands still; each one moves through a different territory, awakening new beginnings. A day moves forward in moments, and once a moment has flickered into life, it vanishes and is replaced by the next. It is fascinating that this is where we live, within an emerging lacework that continually unravels. Often a fleeting moment can hold a whole sequence of the future in distilled form: that unprepared second when you looked in a parent’s eye and saw death already beginning to loom. Or the second you noticed a softening in someone’s voice and you knew that a friendship was beginning. Or catching your partner’s gaze upon you and knowing the love that surrounded you. Each day is seeded with recognitions.

The writing life is a wonderful metaphor for this. The writer goes to his desk to meet the empty white page. As he settles himself, he is preparing himself, for visitation and voyage. Each memory, longing, and craft set the frame for what might emerge. He has no idea what will come. Yet despite its limitations, his creative work will find its own direction to form. Each of us is an artist of our days; the greater our integrity and awareness, the more original and creative our time will become.

Reconnective Healing Practioner

About Me

I have been investigating different forms of healing for as long as I can remember. I studied science in UCC and thought physics and. biology for 13 years before devoting myself fully to T'ai Chi and other related modalities. My first formal training began with the study of Tai Chi which I began in 1989. In 2007 I was recognised as a Master by Grand Master John Kells. I am also qualified in Open Focus and Neurofeedback techniques which I learned with Dr Lester Fehmi in the Princeton Biofeedback Centre and in Lester Levenson's Release techniques.

All of these techniques are wonderful and have certainly helped me in my work to heal body ,mind and spirit. However I felt my search was not complete, I was still looking for some missing part.

Then I came across an interview with Eric Pearl and was intrigued , immediately got his book and as soon as I read it I knew that I had found a healing form that resonated deeply with my experience. I searched out one of his practitioners and experienced a healing. I have never felt such a strong response or knowing in my body. I decided to be ' reconnected ' , and then to train in this amazing practice.

I have felt great benefits since my Reconnection® , and love hearing of the great changes that happen in my clients lives after having a healing or through being reconnected.

I feel that this healing is a great blessing for the planet and all life forms here and my biggest desire is to share it and let more people reap the benefits.